4.8 Article

Seasonality and vertical structure of microbial communities in an ocean gyre

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 3, Issue 10, Pages 1148-1163

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2009.60

Keywords

marine bacteria; community dynamics; ocean stratification

Funding

  1. Marine Microbiology Initiative of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
  2. NSF [MCB-0237728, OCE-0801991]
  3. Feodor Lynen Fellowship of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [0801991] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Division Of Ocean Sciences [0801991] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Vertical, seasonal and geographical patterns in ocean microbial communities have been observed in many studies, but the resolution of community dynamics has been limited by the scope of data sets, which are seldom up to the task of illuminating the highly structured and rhythmic patterns of change found in ocean ecosystems. We studied vertical and temporal patterns in the microbial community composition in a set of 412 samples collected from the upper 300m of the water column in the northwestern Sargasso Sea, on cruises between 1991 and 2004. The region sampled spans the extent of deep winter mixing and the transition between the euphotic and the upper mesopelagic zones, where most carbon fixation and reoxidation occurs. A bioinformatic pipeline was developed to de-noise, normalize and align terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) data from three restriction enzymes and link T-RFLP peaks to microbial clades. Non-metric multidimensional scaling statistics resolved three microbial communities with distinctive composition during seasonal stratification: a surface community in the region of lowest nutrients, a deep chlorophyll maximum community and an upper mesopelagic community. A fourth microbial community was associated with annual spring blooms of eukaryotic phytoplankton that occur in the northwestern Sargasso Sea as a consequence of winter convective mixing that entrains nutrients to the surface. Many bacterial clades bloomed in seasonal patterns that shifted with the progression of stratification. These richly detailed patterns of community change suggest that highly specialized adaptations and interactions govern the success of microbial populations in the oligotrophic ocean. The ISME Journal (2009) 3, 1148-1163; doi: 10.1038/ismej.2009.60; published online 4 June 2009

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